West may need to boost $17 bn Ukraine rescue: IMF

The International Monetary Fund vowed on Tuesday to stand by Ukraine despite the growing likelihood that a worsening pro-Russian uprising would cripple the economy so badly that its current $17.1-billion (13.0-billion-euro) rescue will prove too small.

The International Monetary Fund vowed on Tuesday to stand by Ukraine despite the growing likelihood that a worsening pro-Russian uprising would cripple the economy so badly that its current $17.1-billion (13.0-billion-euro) rescue will prove too small.

The IMF said it was releasing the second $1.39-billion batch of its lifeline despite "major uncertainties" and on the assumption that the ex-Soviet country's Western allies would be ready to pitch in with extra assistance if asked.

"We are assuming that the conflict will begin to subside in the coming months," said Poul Thomsen, acting director of the IMF's European Department, in his first review of Kiev's compliance reform and recovery programme.

"But the balance of risks appear to be tilted to the downside. If this assumption does not hold, we would have to reconsider elements of the programme strategy, and the programmes' viability could hinge on larger assistance from Ukraine's international partners."

It said its worst-case scenario would see Ukraine requiring an additional $19 billion in assistance by the end of 2015.

The IMF approved the two-year standby facility after a wave of deadly winter protests toppled the Russian-backed administration and saw Moscow pull the plug on aid it had hoped could keep Kiev permanently out of the European Union's reach.

The IMF's rescue formed the heart of a $27-billion package that Ukraine's foreign allies vowed to deliver should the new leaders adopt the deeply unpopular but long-overdue measures to rein in outsized state spending and stamp out communist-era corruption and red tape.

But Ukraine's problems — big enough to see the economy slip into recession in mid-2012 — have only worsened since due to persistent tensions with Moscow that have cut it off from Russian trade and required massive spending on a bloody battle against the pro-Kremlin uprising.

The fighting has ground to a halt vital steel mills and coal mines that had served as Ukraine's economic driving engine for more than a century.

The nation of 45 million is now facing the prospect of spending the long winter without crucial Russian gas shipments — halted in May in a politically-charged price dispute -- and unemployment running out of control.

Eastern industrial collapse

The IMF expects the economy to shrink by 6.5% and inflation to reach 19% this year due to the Ukrainian hryvnia's 40% depreciation against the dollar since January.

Analysts attribute the currency collapse to gaping tax revenue shortfalls and the central bank's decision to follow IMF advice and not spend its meagre cash reserves on pricy exchange rate support measures.

The IMF's Ukrainian economic report card also cautioned that this year's growth could decline by a stunning 20 percent in the strife-torn eastern industrial regions of Lugansk and Donetsk.

"The economic situation in the east is very serious," the IMF's Ukrainian mission chief Nikolay Gueorguiev told a conference call.

The IMF said it has agreed to give Kiev some slack by allowing the government to collect a bigger budget deficit than the one initially approved by its board.

The "fiscal strategy has been rebalanced allowing for a larger budget deficit this year to accommodate the temporary loss of revenue... and avoid undue economic and social hardship," the IMF said in its review.

It further stressed that its programme's success "critically depends on the government's ability to make a decisive break with a past riddled with weak governance, widespread corruption, and abysmal business climate."

Ukraine's growth between April and June was 4.7% smaller than over the same period in 2013.